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Katie Hartner has added making rug hooking patterns to her Tyler quilting business. She bought A Nimble Thimble here about 13 years ago and recently acquired Woolley Fox from Barbara Carroll, who ...
A rug-hooking business started by a family in New Glasgow, N.S., in 1892 eventually grew into the world’s largest producer of rug-hooking patterns and now their work is being celebrated in a new ...
Rug hooking is a traditional way that old-timers turned scraps of wool - often from discarded clothing made at the many small mills across New England and southeastern Canada - into something new ...
The boldly colorful hooked rugs in the show are based on authentic historical designs of tavern and trade signs of the 1700s and 1800s.
Woman's rugs receive national recognition Janice Lee has lassoed a little bit of Nebraska with her rugs.
Today, rug hooking has become more art than craft as fibre artists push the boundaries of traditional designs to experiment with form, textures and even materials.